Courtesy Debi Weeks Gouge
CNN  — 

This is usually the time of year that campers are out in full force – from bare-bones backpackers to folks who roll RV-style – all enjoying what nature and summer have to offer.

But 2020 is unlike any other year in our lifetimes. Because of the coronavirus pandemic, it seems like every travel-related decision is a calculus of risk – be it going to a restaurant or buying a plane ticket.

And camping is no exception.

So how has the pandemic affected camping this year? And if you decide to take a camping trip now that things are opening back up, what do you need to know before you go?

Canceled camping trips this spring

In the early stages of the pandemic, less was known about the transmission of Covid-19. As a result, people canceled or postponed trips as the country entered full lockdown mode.

CNN Travel talked with three families – two in Georgia and one in Virginia – who love to camp but who all had to cancel their spring trips, either because facilities closed or because of their own concerns about the pandemic.

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You can go visit Yellowstone Falls, but you'll have to leave before the day is over. No camping yet.

State and national parks across America closed or restricted activities this spring.

For instance, Yellowstone and Grand Canyon had to close temporarily and then offered only phased reopenings in May. And campgrounds at Yellowstone were still closed in mid-June.

Things are starting to open back up – but in patchwork fashion, very much depending on the location.

Private places such as Kampgrounds of America had to close some spots and put limits on others, in compliance with local and state regulations. But most KOAs are open now.

With a few limited exceptions, state parks in Arizona are open, and that includes their campgrounds (even as the state is dealing with an influx of patients with Covid-19 at hospitals).

Georgia, one of the first states to reopen its economy, is allowing camping at its state parks. But visitors will find restrictions – swimming pools and playgrounds will be closed all summer, for instance.

Michigan, which has opened up more cautiously, plans to allow camping at its state parks on June 22. California has started a very cautious, case-by-case reopening of camp sites at its state parks.

It’s a similar situation in Europe. There is no uniformity as to where or whether camping sites will reopen.

Tom O'Hare
32 BEAUTIFUL REASONS TO VISIT IRELAND: Poulnaborne is a Neolithic portal tomb in the Burren region of Clare, dating back to as early as 4,200 BC. It attracts around 200,000 visitors each year.
Tom O'Hare
Laytown Races (Meath): Beach volleyball isn't the only sport that can be played on sand. Thirty miles north of Dublin, a full race meeting is held each September on an east coast beach in Meath, with thousands in attendance.
Chris Hill/Tourism Ireland
Inishmore (Galway): Inishmore is the largest of Galway's Aran Islands, off Ireland's west coast. The flat karst terrain is limestone crissed-crossed with cracks known as grikes.
Tourism Ireland
Benbulbin (Sligo): In the heart of Yeats Country -- the childhood home and final burial place of the poet W. B. Yeats -- Benbulbin is a jaw-like slab of the Dartry Mountains. It gained its distinctive shape during the Ice Age. It can be found on the northwest coast.
Tom O'Hare
Ballintoy Harbour (Antrim): This fishing village on the north-east coast doubled as the Iron Islands in "Game of Thrones." If it doesn't seem dangerous enough in real life, it's a short drive away from the terrifying Carrick-a-Rede rope bridge.
Tourism Ireland
Cliffs of Moher (Clare): Perhaps Ireland's most famous attraction, the 214-meter-tall Cliffs of Moher attract around a million visitors each year. It's on the southwest edge of the Burren region.
Tom O'Hare
Mount Errigal (Donegal): Mount Errigal is the tallest peak in Donegal, northwest Ireland. It's renowned for the pinkish glow of its quartzite rock at sunset.
Tourism Ireland
Moll's Gap (Kerry): A pass on the world-famous Ring of Kerry route, Moll's Gap has views towards the Macgillycuddy's Reeks mountains. The rocks here are Old Red Sandstone.
Fáilte Ireland
Killiney (Dublin): Stay in the exclusive seaside suburb of Killiney, south Dublin, and you might be lucky enough to spot neighbors Bono and Enya when you pop out for some milk (although they might send their butler for theirs).
Courtesy Northern Ireland Tourist Board
Mussenden Temple (Derry): Another "Game of Thrones" filming location, Mussenden Temple is an 18th-century folly -- originally built as a summer library -- perched dramatically on a northwestern clifftop overlooking the Atlantic Ocean.
Tourism Ireland
Connemara (Galway): Connemara, in northwest Galway, is one of the country's official Gaeltacht -- or Irish-speaking -- regions. In 2010, the number of daily Irish speakers in Ireland as a whole was estimated at 83,000, out of a population of around 4.6 million.
Failte Ireland
Castlegregory (Kerry): Surfers can catch waves straight off the Atlantic at Castlegregory, a village halfway between the lively town of Dingle and Tralee, home to the endearingly outdated "Rose of Tralee" beauty contest.
Tom O'Hare
Tollymore Forest Park (Down): C. S. Lewis is said to have found his inspiration for the fictional land of Narnia in the sweeping mountains and labyrinthine forests of the Mourne region. Tollymore Forest Park -- home to waterfalls, bridges and grottoes -- still feels like somewhere one might encounter a faun or even a wildling. "Game of Thrones" was filmed here too.
Tourism Ireland
Powerscourt Estate (Wicklow): A popular day-trip from Dublin, Powerscourt Estate in Enniskerry is noted for its grand country house, landscaped gardens, golf course, and Ireland's highest waterfall.
Tom O'Hare
Strangford (Down): Strangford village sits at the mouth of Strangford Lough, the largest inlet in the UK or Ireland. A ferry connects it with the village of Portaferry, on the southern tip of the Ards Peninsula.
Tourism Ireland
The Skelligs (Kerry): Skellig Michael is an imposing, windswept hunk of rock and a UNESCO World Heritage Site 12 kilometers off the southwest coast. If it looks familiar, that's because it starred in the ending of "Star Wars: Episode VII -- The Force Awakens."
Failte Ireland
Trinity College Long Room (Dublin): The 65-meter "Long Room" is the main chamber of the Old Library at Trinity College Dublin. Former students who perhaps took inspiration within these walls include Oscar Wilde, Jonathan Swift, Bram Stoker and Samuel Beckett.
Tom O'Hare
Tyrella Beach (Down): An Irish folk song penned in the 19th century by Percy French, and later covered by Don McLean, celebrates the northeast coast "where the mountains of Mourne sweep down to the sea."
Tourism Ireland
The Burren (Clare): The Burren (from the Irish word "boíreann," meaning rocky place) is a 250-kilometer-square area in south-west Ireland. It's a vast karst landscape of broken limestone, cliffs, caves, fossils and rock formations.
Tom O'Hare
Dublin Docklands (Dublin): The regenerated Dublin Docklands have seen plenty of new developments in recent years, including the construction of the Convention Centre Dublin and Samuel Beckett Bridge (pictured).
Tourism Ireland
Ross Castle (Killarney): Ross Castle is a 15-century tower house and keep on the edge of Lough Leane, the largest of Killarney's three lakes.
Tourism Ireland
Blarney Castle (Cork): Blarney Castle -- and the famous Blarney Stone inside it -- are so pretty it's no wonder people have been coming for centuries to kiss it.
Tourism Ireland
Newgrange (Meath): This 5,000-year-old tomb is older than the Egyptian pyramids and is an astonishing feat of Neolithic engineering. It's aligned with the rising sun and on the winter solstice its innermost chamber is filled with light. Tickets for the annual event are only available by lottery.
AFP/Getty Images/File
Giant's Causeway (Antrim): Legend has it that these interlocking basalt columns were formed when Irish giant Finn McCool built a bridge across the Irish Sea so he could go fight a Scottish giant with whom he had beef. The scientific explanation is almost as good, though. The 40,000 pillars are the result of a volcanic eruption some 50 to 60 million years ago.
Tourism Ireland
Hill of Tara (Meath): The Hill of Tara is the ancient seat of the High Kings of Ireland and has been in use since the Neolithic era. Margaret Mitchell borrowed some of Tara's resonance when she gave its name to Scarlett O'Hara's beloved homestead in "Gone With the Wind."
Tourism Ireland
Glendalough (Wicklow): The glacial valley of Glendalough is home to a sixth-century monastic settlement founded by Saint Kevin. He was an ascetic, with one particularly lurid legend claiming he drowned a woman who tried to seduce him.
Tourism Ireland
Kinsale (Cork): A stop on the Wild Atlantic Way -- a 2,500-kilometer driving route along the west coast -- Kinsale claims to be Ireland's foodie capital.
Courtesy Northern Ireland Tourist Board
Dark Hedges (Antrim): You might recognize this avenue of 18th-century beech trees from the second season of "Game of Thrones," when Arya Stark flees King's Landing disguised as a boy. The village of Stranocum is now a regular stop on Northern Ireland's "Game of Thrones" location tours.
Tourism Ireland
Lismore Castle (Waterford): Want to stay in your own private 12th-century castle, complete with 15 bedrooms? The Irish seat of Britain's Duke of Devonshire, Lismore Castle is available for exclusive hire -- at about 50,000 euros a week.
Tourism Ireland
Achill Island (Mayo): Achill is the largest island off the coast of Ireland and is home to a population of fewer than 3,000 people. The land here is mostly peat bog.
Tourism Ireland
Allihies (Cork): The Allihies Copper Mine Trail is a walking route around the wild Beara Peninsula, with spectacular mountain and sea views.
Tom O'Hare
Glenariff Forest Park (Antrim): Hidden from the crowds heading to the nearby Giant's Causeway, Glenariff Forest Park is home to the Waterfall Walkway, featuring a total of three stunning waterfalls along its path.

According to ACSI, an organization that specializes in camping information for Europe, campsites in Belgium were set to open on June 8, while Ireland is holding off on opening campsites until July 20.

New Zealand, which acted early on the pandemic, is now almost Covid-19 free. For its citizens, that means full access to huts, campgrounds and toilets as restrictions are lifted. Even so, the government urges its people to remain vigilant – stay home if you’re sick and keep up with the hand washing.

A lower risk activity

The good news for campers around the world itching to get some fresh air and sleep under the stars: There is growing consensus that transmission risks are lower outdoors than inside.

Claudia Finkelstein, an associate professor of family medicine at Michigan State University, pointed out in a recent article featured on CNN: “The final word on outdoor recreation? Of course, go out and be active. It’s important for your mental and physical health. But, choose wisely, be prepared and stay safe.”

The news site MLive recently spoke with four public health specialists in Michigan who rated 36 activities by their estimated level of risk. On a scale of 1 to 10 with 10 being the highest risk level, camping came in at a relatively low 3. That was on par with golfing and getting groceries.

For comparison, they rated playing tennis at just a 1 and going to gyms and amusement parks at an 8.

Day camping

Debi Gouge, a small-business owner and art instructor in Wythe County, Virginia, has longtime love of camping.

Courtesy Debi Weeks Gouge
Debi Gouge and her husband, Tim, love their pop-up -- even for the day.

“Nature and camping have always been a place where I reconnect and refresh myself. Being out there breathing the air, and enjoying the beauty of the trees and the wind blowing though them is what I love,” she said. “Also, it inspires me to create and paint.”

So the pandemic has hit Debi, husband Tim Gouge and their nine dogs hard. She’s had to be particularly cautious about staying virus-free because of a lifelong kidney condition.

“I have been very stressed these last few months,” Gouge said. “Loss of income, not working, the unknown, etc.

Courtesy Debi Weeks Gouge
The Gouges like to visit Claytor Lake, which is close to their home.

“Then my wonderful husband came up with the great idea to give me some peace – day camping. We set up our camper at Claytor Lake, which is within 20 miles of us and spend the days camping, hiking … cooking out – the works!

“And then we come home late in the evening to sleep since we cannot have a pet sitter right now, and next morning, back to the campground.”

She said there there were no worries about social distancing or wearing masks as there was almost no one in the campground.

“It has been wonderful.”

Isolated private farms and social bubbles

Kip Hardy, her husband, Brian, and their two children ages 7 and 2 like to use their home in Decatur, Georgia, as a base to explore the Southeast.

But the pandemic led her to cancel an early May camping trip in yurts at a Georgia state park.

“We booked with two other families. One couldn’t bring their dog. The other family didn’t feel quite ready to venture out. Still having to share bathrooms made the other family shy away.”

Another concern was Brian was still recovering from a recent surgery. Add it all up, and the camping trip became unworkable.

But that setback hasn’t stopped the enterprising Hardys.

The family camped by themselves the last weekend in May at a private farm near Collegedale, Tennessee, that she said was huge.

“There were other people there, but not within half a mile of us. I was comfortable with that level of isolation. We encountered other people and said hello, but kept on walking.”

The farm had horses and baby goats that her kids could play with.

Since the late May trip, she said they have joined a “social bubble” with another family.

Hardy said having an arrangement with another family might guide them toward sometimes making decisions that are more conservative than they’d make just for themselves.

“You have to consider the other family.”

national park service
Their metro Atlanta location puts the Hardys within driving distance of places such as Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

Nevertheless, the two families – a total of eight people – have settled on a camping trip this weekend on a private farm outside of Asheville, North Carolina. Hardy likes the private farm as she has more confidence in social distancing in such a setting.

One of the last considerations for the Hardys on choosing a destination: “How far do we think we can drive without having to stop a lot with young kids? Three hours is about that.”

Delayed gratification

Tony Lankford, the senior minister at First Baptist Church of St. Simons Island, Georgia, had to cancel a “pretty epic” urban camping trip with his wife, Tiffany, 12-year-old daughter Kaley and 10-year-old son Carter.

“We have been planning … to explore places our kids have never been – Washington, D.C., New York City, Richmond and Williamsburg, Virginia,” Lankford told CNN Travel.

“Considering most of those stops are more urban environments and so much is still unknown about what the summer brings for those areas in terms of Covid-19, we decided to cancel our trip.”

CNN
For the Lankfords, camping was a great way to escape the pace of Atlanta city life. They've moved since then, but their love of camping hasn't changed.

He said they started camping as a family about eight years ago for fast getaways.

“We lived in downtown Atlanta and wanted an easy way to get out of the city, have our kids experience nature, and actually see the stars,” Lankford said.

“We purchased a 1969 Serro Scotty [trailer] for cheap, and I fixed it up. Our go-to was Red Top Mountain or Stone Mountain Park. Since I do not have Sundays off, they made for quick, easy trips.”

Lankford has since upgraded campers twice and now has a 26-foot camper with bunks “so everyone can have their own space and take longer trips.”

And they still plan on camping – just later in the year.

“Our next scheduled trip is our annual ‘Campsgiving,’ he said. “Each year a big group of my wife’s family camp together the week of Thanksgiving. It is always a great time of hanging out, eating a lot and letting our children see [family].”

Safety tips if you decide to go

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Before you camp at beautiful places such as Claytor Lake State Park in Virginia, be sure you've planned for safety.

There are numerous sources with safety tips if you decide to go camping, whether it’s on public or private sites.

The state parks system in Minnesota has an excellent, detailed online guide (PDF). And the Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation in Vermont, another state that’s a favorite of the outdoors set, has important tips.

Some of the highlights from their detailed suggestions:

– Don’t be spontaneous; make plans: Place reservations and buy permits, firewood, ice and other things online or by phone before you get to the campsite.

– Come supplied with cleaning and personal hygiene agents: Arrive with your own soap, surface disinfectants, hand sanitizer, paper towels and toilet paper. This is one area where you shouldn’t skimp.

– Social distancing: Set up your campsite – including sleeping, campfire and eating areas – to be as far as possible from nearby campsites that hold people from different households.

– Keep it in the family: Only let those in your household or “social bubble” into your individual campsite or RV.

– Be respectful of the rules: Follow all campground rules and instructions for your own safety and that of others. That might include wearing a face mask in public areas, heeding social distancing signs and leaving furniture such as chairs and picnic tables where you found them.

– Avoid contact sports: For instance, outdoor basketball courts may be open to shoot hoops, but signs prohibiting contact games should be respected.

– Trails: If a trail is marked closed, there’s a good reason. Don’t go on it.